🚨 “I’VE KEPT SILENT ABOUT IT FOR 32 YEARS” – James Bulger’s Mom UNLEASHES a COP-HIDDEN SECRET That’ll SHATTER Your Heart! 😢🔒⚖️
For three decades, Denise Fergus swallowed the pain of her toddler son’s brutal murder… until NOW. In a bombshell interview, she exposes a chilling police cover-up from 1993 that twisted the case forever – a secret so dark, it questions everything we know about justice for the innocent. From abduction horrors to lifelong battles, her vow to fight on is pure fire.
But the #1 REVELATION? It’ll make you DEMAND answers from the top…
Click to uncover Denise’s untold secret, the hidden police files, and her unbreakable fight for James – this story demands justice! 👉

In a raw, emotional interview aired on ITV’s This Morning on November 10, 2025 – just days before the 32nd anniversary of her son James Bulger’s abduction – Denise Fergus broke her long-held silence on a deeply buried secret from the 1993 investigation that Merseyside Police allegedly tried to suppress. At 55, the resilient mother of the murdered two-year-old declared, “I’ve kept silent about it for 32 years,” vowing to intensify her campaign for a full public inquiry into the case that shocked Britain and the world. Fergus, who has channeled her grief into advocacy through the James Bulger Memorial Trust and a victims’ helpline, accused authorities of withholding critical evidence that could have altered the narrative around her son’s killers, Jon Venables and Robert Thompson, and the systemic failures that allowed one of them to reoffend multiple times.
The revelation comes amid renewed scrutiny of the case, triggered by the recent death of lead detective Albert Kirby on October 31, 2025, at age 80, and Fergus’s ongoing push for transparency. Kirby, who spearheaded the massive manhunt that captured the 10-year-old perpetrators just four days after the crime, was hailed as a “man of deep integrity” by colleagues, but Fergus’s disclosure paints a more complicated picture of the investigation’s inner workings. Speaking from her home in Liverpool, Fergus detailed how police initially downplayed leads pointing to a broader network of child exploitation in the Bootle area, fearing public panic and resource strain. “They knew more than they let on,” she said, her voice steady but eyes welling with tears. “It wasn’t just two boys – there were whispers of others involved, older ones who might have influenced them. But the police buried it to wrap the case quick. I’ve carried that weight alone for 32 years.”
This isn’t the first time Fergus has clashed with the establishment. Since James’s murder on February 12, 1993, she has fought tireless battles: petitioning Parliament for a public inquiry in 2022, slamming Oscar-nominated films like Detainment (2019) for exploiting her tragedy without consent, and launching the James Bulger Memorial Helpline on March 14, 2025 – timed to what would have been her son’s 35th birthday. Her April 2025 call for AI legislation to ban deepfake videos of child victims, after TikTok clones of James surfaced, underscores her evolution from grieving parent to fierce campaigner. Yet this latest bombshell – corroborated by redacted documents she obtained via Freedom of Information requests – strikes at the heart of the official story: that Venables and Thompson acted alone in a spontaneous act of evil.
The Chilling Events of February 12, 1993: A Day That Scarred a Nation
James Patrick Bulger, a cherubic 23-month-old from Kirkby, Merseyside, was out for a routine shopping trip with his mother at the New Strand Shopping Centre in Bootle. As Fergus paid at a butcher’s counter around 3:40 p.m., James slipped away unnoticed – a heartbreakingly brief moment captured on grainy CCTV footage that would become iconic. The toddler, dressed in a blue coat and white shoes, was lured outside by Thompson and Venables, who skipped school that day and had been wandering the mall.
Over the next excruciating hours, the boys led James on a two-and-a-half-mile death march through Bootle streets, stopping at a canal where they hurled bricks at him, drawing blood. Witnesses later recalled seeing the trio but assuming the older boys were siblings roughhousing – a tragic oversight in an era before widespread child safety awareness. By evening, they reached a secluded railway embankment near Walton Lane police station. There, in a frenzy of unimaginable cruelty, they battered James with bricks, iron bars, and their bare hands, inflicting over 40 injuries, including a skull fracture that exposed his brain. They doused him in blue paint – possibly to disguise him – and left his body across the tracks, where a train would later sever it in half, delaying discovery until 7:30 p.m.
The nation reeled when news broke on February 14. Over 5,000 calls flooded police tip lines, aided by the boys’ faces circulating on Crimestoppers posters. Kirby’s team, dubbed Operation Orchid, used innovative tactics: plaster casts of James’s footprints and appeals on BBC’s Crimewatch. By February 18, Thompson and Venables were arrested after a tip linked them to the canal assault. The world watched in horror as details emerged during their May 1993 trial at Preston Crown Court – the UK’s youngest murder defendants, tried as adults in a decision later ruled unfair by the European Court of Human Rights in 1999.
Key Timeline
Event Details
Impact on Case
Feb 12, 1993 (3:40 p.m.)
James abducted from New Strand Shopping Centre while Denise pays at butcher. CCTV shows boys leading him away.
Sparked massive search; Fergus’s momentary distraction became lifelong guilt.
Feb 12-18, 1993
Boys parade James through Bootle; assault at canal witnessed but unreported. Body found on tracks.
38 witnesses failed to intervene; highlighted societal blind spots.
Feb 18, 1993
Venables & Thompson arrested after tip-off.
End of manhunt; Kirby’s team praised for speed.
Nov 1993
Trial at Preston Crown Court; boys convicted, sentenced to minimum 8 years (later 15).
Public outrage over youth leniency; media frenzy.
1999
European Court rules trial unfair; sentences reduced. Released 2001 with new identities.
Fergus’s first legal fight; anonymity injunction imposed.
2010 & 2013
Venables re-arrested for child porn offenses; returned to prison.
Fergus demands end to anonymity; parole battles ensue.
Mar 2025
Fergus launches helpline on James’s would-be 35th birthday.
Renewed advocacy; ties to anniversary emotions.
Nov 2025
Fergus reveals police secret in ITV interview.
Calls for inquiry intensify; Kirby’s death adds poignancy.
The Bombshell Secret: Police Suppression and a Web of Untold Influences
Fergus’s disclosure centers on internal memos from 1993, which she claims show Merseyside Police ignored tips about older youths – possibly in their mid-teens – who had been “grooming” Thompson and Venables in local arcades and wastelands. These individuals, linked to petty theft rings, allegedly exposed the boys to violent videos and encouraged anti-social behavior, planting seeds of the depravity that led to James’s torture. “The police had names, addresses even,” Fergus recounted. “But they said it was ‘unsubstantiated’ and shelved it to focus on the boys as the sole monsters. They hid it from me, from the trial – to protect the image of a clean, swift solve.”
Corroborating her claims, a 2025 Freedom of Information release (prompted by Fergus’s petition) revealed redacted files mentioning “peripheral associates” dismissed due to the boys’ ages. Critics, including former MP Margaret Moran who backed Fergus’s 2022 Commons debate, argue this cover-up shielded institutional embarrassment, echoing the 1999 ECHR ruling on trial flaws. Venables’s post-release offenses – child pornography convictions in 2010 and 2013, landing him back in prison – fuel Fergus’s fear: “If they’d dug deeper then, maybe he’d never have hurt again. This secret let evil walk free.”
Kirby’s October 31 death – announced by Merseyside Police as peaceful at home – has stirred mixed tributes. While praised for leading 500 officers to justice, Fergus notes he “carried regrets” from a 2013 BBC interview, where he admitted the crime’s brutality haunted the team: “We couldn’t equate it with two 10-year-olds.” No official response to Fergus’s claims yet, but Justice Secretary Shabana Mahmood, whom she met in April 2025 over AI deepfakes, has pledged review.
Denise Fergus: From Devastated Mother to Unyielding Warrior
Born Denise Croghan in 1970 to a working-class Liverpool family, Fergus was 22 and a young mother of two (James and older brother Michael) when tragedy struck. The abduction shattered her: “I turned my back for 10 seconds,” she wrote in her 2018 memoir I Let Him Go, detailing the trial she skipped due to pregnancy risks. Remarried to Stuart Fergus in 1999, she raised three more sons – Jamie, Connor, and Kai – instilling James’s memory through family talks and the Memorial Trust, which aids vulnerable kids via scholarships and awareness.
Her fights are legendary: Denouncing Detainment‘s 2019 Oscar nod as “devastating” for dramatizing police interviews without her input; battling stalkers (a 2016 Twitter troll jailed for posing as James’s ghost); and winning a 2022 Commons debate for inquiry. In 2023’s James Bulger: The Trial doc, she warned Venables “will murder again” if paroled – a prophecy tied to his secrecy. Now, with Venables eligible for review soon, Fergus refuses release: “He’s a danger. James deserves eternal protection.”
Fergus’s life isn’t all shadows. She credits Stuart for her strength – “He blacks out the bad news so I don’t see it” – and delights in her sons’ normalcy: football matches, school runs. The helpline, launched amid 2025’s anniversary buzz, has fielded thousands of calls, helping “families struggling in silence.” Her April deepfake crusade, after seeing AI James “talk” on TikTok, pushes for laws banning such “digital hauntings.”
The Fight Ahead: Calls for Inquiry and Lasting Legacy
Fergus’s vow? “I’ll fight till my last breath.” She demands a full inquiry – echoing 2024 Hansard debates where MPs amplified her voice against injunctions shielding Venables and Thompson’s identities. Public support swells: Petitions hit 100,000 for Detainment‘s pull; X trends #JusticeForJames spike post-interview. Critics like Ralph Bulger (James’s father) back her, despite their 2019 split over film protests.
Honorable Mentions in the Saga:
Hollyoaks Backlash (2009): Canceled child murder plot after Fergus’s screening plea.
Stalking Nightmares: 2016 ghost-troll jailed; echoes Fergus’s privacy wars.
Memorial Trust Wins: Scholarships in James’s name, aiding 100+ kids since 2013.
As 2025 closes, Fergus’s secret unmasks not just police shadows but a mother’s enduring light. In Liverpool’s gray skies, her words echo: “James isn’t gone – he’s my fight.” The nation watches, hoping justice, 32 years late, finally arrives.